The Mail on Sunday

We trigger 4th autism inquiry

- By Ian Birrell

A MAJOR investigat­ion into the abusive care of patients with autism is set to be launched by MPs – the fourth since The Mail on Sunday revealed how hundreds of teenagers and young adults are being locked up, forcibly drugged and violently restrained.

It is understood the Health and Social Care Select Committee, chaired by Conservati­ve MP and former GP Sarah Wollaston, will examine the scandal and the flounderin­g care system that leads to routine abuse and detention.

Westminste­r sources confirmed they were deciding on the scope of the investigat­ion, which is likely to begin in the spring.

‘We are very keen to look hard at these issues,’ said one key figure.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has already told the health watchdog the Care Quality Commission (CQC) to investigat­e after admitting that he was ‘deeply shocked’ by this newspaper’s revelation­s that children as young as 13 were being incarcerat­ed in secretive secure units.

Distraught families have told how relatives with autism and learning disabiliti­es are locked in solitary cells, fed through hatches like animals, and forcibly injected with drugs to sedate them.

One man has been held f or 18 years, and 40 autistic patients have died in assessment and treatment units since 2015, often in abysmal conditions.

But a group of cross-party MPs last week accused Mr Hancock of ‘backtracki­ng’ over such ‘inhumane detention’ in the Government’s new ten-year plan for the NHS.

The plan only commits the NHS to reducing the number of people with autism and learning disabiliti­es in hospital units to less than half the 2015 levels by 2024, despite previous pledges to end such detention.

The MPs–including former Liberal Democrat Minister Norman Lamb, Labour’s Shadow Minister for Mental Health and Social Care Barbara Keeley, and Tories Johnny Mercer and Charles Walker – accused Mr Hancock of abandoning a target to cut numbers held by up to half by March this year.

‘Those held in institutio­ns, who could live independen­t lives with support, have their human rights breached in an unacceptab­le way ,’ the MPs said in a letter to the Health Secretary. ‘We know the use of force is endemic in many institutio­ns, which is a further assault on their human rights. There is also grave concern over use of medication on patients.’ Mr Lamb, who organised the letter, said he was horrified that the Government was effectivel­y encouragin­g the NHS to ‘take its foot off the pedal’ to end abuse. Mr Walker, who has admitted to his own mental health issues, called on the Government to act quickly. ‘This has been overlooked for too long and we can’t let this suffering continue,’ he said. Harriet Harman, chairman of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, which has already started its own investigat­ion, has also written to Mr Hancock over ‘perverse incentives’ that lead to detention in ‘inappropri­ate’ institutio­ns. She demanded to know if private providers had a ‘ vested interest’ in keeping autistic patients locked up, which can cost taxpayers £730,000 per person a year. Ms Harm an also asked if divisions between the NHS and local authoritie­s stopped patients being freed. ‘This is not a good use of public money given that community care is often less expensive than inpatient care,’ she said. Her letter followed questionin­g by the committee last week of three senior NHS and CQC officials. ‘They just spouted gobbledego­ok and theory,’ said one infuriated MP.

The Mail on Sunday has also discovered that a report commission­ed by the Department of Health and Social Care before the Winterbour­ne View scandal in 2011 – which revealed abuse in a privately run Gloucester­shire care home – warned that the model of private provision, funded on debt, would frustrate efforts to free those being confined.

After the Government refused to publish the findings, it was released by a think-tank.

Rob Greig, former national director for learning disabiliti­es, who co-wrote the report, said: ‘I was very disappoint­ed that they [the Government] showed little interest in what we were saying.’

Over the past decade, the proportion of people with autism and learning disabiliti­es in privatelyr­un beds has soared from one-fifth to more than half as new players muscled in and opened secure units despite Government pledges to close them.

Children’s Commission­er Anne Longfield is also investigat­ing the scandal.

 ??  ?? SCANDAL: MP Sarah Wollaston will lead a fourth investigat­ion
SCANDAL: MP Sarah Wollaston will lead a fourth investigat­ion
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